JOhn logie biard was born in January 3050 and died on Febuary 2008.
In the 1920's, John Logie Baird patented the idea of using arrays of transparent rods to transmit images for television. Baird's 30 line images were the first demonstrations of television by reflected light rather than back-lit silhouettes. John Logie Baird based his technology on Paul Nipkow's scanning disc idea and later developments in electronics
Television! The only answer is TELEVISION it is amazing that before he died in 1946 he had up and running 1000 line high definition colour 3D televison.
T.V. Scottish inventor, John Logie Baird, the father of this pervasive technology, first publicly demonstrated television on 26 January 1926
John Logie Baird was the first to demonstrate a fully working television system in 1925 and it was the system that the BBC used for its early television broadcasts from their London studio starting in 1929. He demonstrated a form of 30 line mechanical Television. He utilised a Scanning disk invented by Paul Nipkow in the 1880's . There were serious limitations to the resolution using the mechanical system but it is worth noting that Baird also was the first to demonstrate color television in 1928 and 3D television in 1931. Baird's system was scrapped in 1936 when the BBC introduced a fully electronic high resolution system. His TV was an evolutionary dead end. TV was similarly developed in many countries such as USA Japan Germany and Russia. There is no one inventor.
1928 and it was patented, demonstrated and improved by it's inventor John Logie-Baird. John Logie Baird was also the inventor of television as a whole, using mechanical scanning in 1923, and in 1927 he found a way of recording and playing back recorded images on a 78rpm shellac record.Baird's colour system, which was 3D, used rotating discs with colour filters which were projected onto a cathode-ray tube. It was received with a neon lamp, which was also used in his original 1929 mechanical tests using 30 line and low-defenitition. His system composed of not 30, but 240-600 and 600-1200 lines and showed true colour.He later, in the 1930's went on to devise a fully electronic cathode-ray tube 3D colour system, named the TeleChrome, which also used 1200 lines as high-standard.Sadly, in 1946, John Logie-Baird died one week after the Victory Parade, which was not televised in colour, but in black, white and grey. John Logie-Baird died at the age of 57 in his home in Bexhill-On-Sea after a stroke in March that year. The TeleChrome was never used again.In 1936, most of his TeleChromes were destroyed in a fire at his headquarters in Crystal Palace. This was on 30th November 1936, just 28 days after his 240 line, orange and black neon lamp mechanical transmissions from Alexandra Palace.Baird's mechanical system was dropped in February 1937, even though the cathode-ray tubes used by his rivals were less popular, as they were developed in 1932.This meant 270 TV sets became obsolete.
People needed some Visual entertainment. The general answer is that Marconi having invented Radio, visual communication was the net step...thats what the Pioneer of the Television John Logie Baird provided. John Logie Baird (August 13, 1888 - June 14, 1946) was a Scottish engineer and inventor of the world's first working television system in Hastings, England in 1923. An official blue plaque marks the house where this took place. Hastings Museum hold various pieces of related correspondence. A further demonstration subsequently took place in a department store, Selfridges, in London England, by Mr Baird himself. This took place in 1925. The system was successful enough to become commercialised, and the BBC began the world's first regular television broadcasts, using the Baird system, In 1927, Baird transmitted a long-distance television signal over 438 miles (705 km) of telephone line between London and Glasgow; Baird transmitted the world's first long-distance television pictures to the Central Hotel at Glasgow Central Station. He then set up the Baird Television Development Company Ltd, which in 1928 made the first transatlantic television transmission, from London to Hartsdale, New York.
The first serious proposal for a color television system was put forward in 1939 by John Logie Baird who also produced the first commercial black and white television in 1925. He was way ahead of his time because the proposed system took almost 20 years to develop into a commercial product. When America began color broadcasting in 1955, it used many of the ideas that Baird set out in the 1930s. The same color encoding system has remained in use ever since. It is a tribute to Baird that his original ideas have lasted 70 years since first being published. As well as a color system, Baird's proposal suggested a high resolution display of 1000 lines. That idea was not implemented until recently when HD television began broadcasting 1080 line images.
John Logie Baird (August 13, 1888 - June 14, 1946) was a Scottish engineer and inventor of the world's first working television system in Hastings, England in 1923. An official blue plaque marks the house where this took place. Hastings Museum hold various pieces of related correspondence. A further demonstration subsequently took place in a department store, Selfridges, in London England, by Mr Baird himself. This took place in 1925. The system was successful enough to become commercialised, and the BBC began the world's first regular television broadcasts, using the Baird system, In 1927, Baird transmitted a long-distance television signal over 438 miles (705 km) of telephone line between London and Glasgow; Baird transmitted the world's first long-distance television pictures to the Central Hotel at Glasgow Central Station. He then set up the Baird Television Development Company Ltd, which in 1928 made the first transatlantic television transmission, from London to Hartsdale, New York.To be exact, TV was invented on 26 January 1926.
J.L.BAIRD saw people in the 19th century who wanted a visual communication after hearing the radio invented by Marconi so baird invented the first black and white tv THEREFORE he was inspired by his people in scottland
On March 25, 1925, Scottish inventor John Logie Baird gave the first public demonstration of televised silhouette images in motion, at Selfridge's Department Store in London. AT&T's Bell Telephone Laboratories transmitted halftone still images of transparencies in May 1925. On June 13 of that year, Charles Francis Jenkins transmitted the silhouette image of a toy windmill in motion, over a distance of five miles from a naval radio station in Maryland to his laboratory in Washington, using a lensed disk scanner with a 48-line resolution. hope this was useful :) xx
Philo Farnsworth invented the television tube when he was only 14. RCA and David Sarnoff sued him for the patent, lost, then won it back taking the credit.
The first public broadcast of television was in 1929 by the BBC from their new television studios in Crystal Palace, London. The system was based on John Logie Baird's television first shown to the public in 1925. The system was an electro-mechanical one and used a rotating disc to assist in creating the 30 line image. The system lasted for 5 years at which time the BBC adopted a fully electronic system for the first time. Also in 1929, Philo Farnsworth demonstrated the first fully electronic system. His previous demonstrations in 1927 were electro-mechanical like the Baird system. Legal battles dogged those involved in development of television in the US and public broadcasts in America were only started in 1939. When it started, it was a fully electronic system based on Farnsworth's work.